Bird-keeping, by the author of 'Domestic pets'.1869 |
Z wnętrza książki
Wyniki 1 - 5 z 26
Strona 11
... rearing a particular breed of Pigeons , who succeeded in bringing about a friendship between the Sparrow Hawk and the Pigeons . He flew about with them , and roosted at night in their dove - cote , and showed none of his natural ...
... rearing a particular breed of Pigeons , who succeeded in bringing about a friendship between the Sparrow Hawk and the Pigeons . He flew about with them , and roosted at night in their dove - cote , and showed none of his natural ...
Strona 21
... reared the young bird , and re- turned again to their " clump " in the following spring , bringing up other families in the same nest . These birds are said to have a great attachment to the place where they have once had a nest , and ...
... reared the young bird , and re- turned again to their " clump " in the following spring , bringing up other families in the same nest . These birds are said to have a great attachment to the place where they have once had a nest , and ...
Strona 36
... reared upon bread and milk , till they are five or six weeks old , and then they should be gradually weaned from it , and fed upon scraped lean beef and bread crumbs . When older , their food should be chiefly barley - meal , made into ...
... reared upon bread and milk , till they are five or six weeks old , and then they should be gradually weaned from it , and fed upon scraped lean beef and bread crumbs . When older , their food should be chiefly barley - meal , made into ...
Strona 38
... reared from the nest , they must be kept warm and fed on sop made of stale white bread and milk : they are large eaters , and must not be overfed : a quarter of a pound of bread would be enough for four nestlings in the day ; they will ...
... reared from the nest , they must be kept warm and fed on sop made of stale white bread and milk : they are large eaters , and must not be overfed : a quarter of a pound of bread would be enough for four nestlings in the day ; they will ...
Strona 47
... reared by hand . A gentleman who has been very successful in his treatment of Nightingales , and says that he has not eaten a Christmas dinner for twenty years with- out the Nightingales ' song , fed them entirely on scraped raw beef ...
... reared by hand . A gentleman who has been very successful in his treatment of Nightingales , and says that he has not eaten a Christmas dinner for twenty years with- out the Nightingales ' song , fed them entirely on scraped raw beef ...
Kluczowe wyrazy i wyrażenia
African American Goldfinch amusing ants attached aviary bath beak beautiful Bechstein berries bird-dealers Blackcap blue Blue Tit body bread crumbs bread soaked breast brown Bullfinch cage bird called Canary captivity Chaffinch cock cold colour confinement crest Crow tribe easily tamed egg food eggs elderberries England Falcons feathers feed feet female Finch fond Fringilla fruit garden Goldfinch green grey habits Hawk head hemp-seed Indian insects Jackdaw Java Sparrows large cage larvæ legs Linnet little bird live male mealworms meat moulting mule bird nest night Nightingale occasionally Owls pair Parrakeets Parrot peck perch Peregrine Falcon plumage pretty Raven reared resembles round seed sing Siskin soaked in milk sometimes song songster soon Sparrow species Starling sweet taught throat Thrush TITMOUSE TREE PIPIT trees WARBLER warm Waxbills wild wings and tail winter wire Woodlark yellow young birds
Popularne fragmenty
Strona 1 - UNDER THE GREENWOOD TREE' UNDER the greenwood tree Who loves to lie with me, And turn his merry note Unto the sweet bird's throat; Come hither, come hither, come hither: Here shall he see No enemy But winter and rough weather. Who doth ambition shun And loves to live i...
Strona 7 - ... over the steepest mountains and deepest rivers, and in her glorious career looks with contempt upon those high steeples and magnificent palaces which we adore and wonder at; from which height I can make her to descend by a word from my mouth (which she both knows and obeys), to accept of meat from my hand, to own me for her master, to go home with me, and be willing the next day to afford me the like recreation.
Strona 156 - Distinct Volumes. Compiled and Edited by JE CARPENTER, Twelve Years Public Reader, Lecturer, and Entertainer at the Principal Literary Institutions in Great Britain.
Strona 82 - moults," — which is generally in July or August, according to the heat of the weather — all you need to do is, to keep him quiet and free from draughts. Being a cheerful, lively bird, there is no need to have him covered up, but do not let him be unduly excited. Give him a very small quantity of raw beef, scraped, and moistened with cold water, once a week ; occasionally, a little yolk of hard-boiled egg; and now and then a piece of sponge-cake, and ripe chickweed in full flower. Nature will...
Strona 156 - Two Volumes (each sold separately). Sunday Readings > in Prose and Verse^ Edited and arranged by JE CARPENTER. Devoted in the main to Sacred Literature, but blended with Moral and Instructive Pieces of a Secular Character, all by Eminent Authors. In Five Volumes crown 8vo, cloth extra, each $$0pp., price 201.
Strona 11 - Falco subbuted) are true Falcons, and though but small birds, possess great courage and are of rapid flight. The Merlin was considered a very excellent bird for hawking, and was much used to fly at partridges and other small birds. It is easily tamed and exceedingly docile. An amusing anecdote is told by Mr. Knox of a wild Merlin who was his daily companion while snipe-shooting in Ireland, following him from one marsh to another, and always watching for a wounded bird to which he could give chase...
Strona 156 - Clubs, and all kindred Societies, and for the General Reader, Compiled and Edited by JE CARPENTER, TWELVE YEARS PUBLIC READER, LECTURER, AND ENTERTAINER AT THE PRINCIPAL LITERARY INSTITUTIONS IN GREAT BRITAIN.